The Barak Brigade is one of the regular armored brigades of
the Northern Command. The Barak Brigade was formed before the
establishment of the State of Israel, when it was known as the
Carmeli Brigade. It was then an infantry brigade which fought
in the north of Israel, from the Western Galilee to kibbutz
Manara.
Today, the brigade's symbol is that of the Carmeli brigade,
which has been used since the brigade was established. After
the establishment of the State, all the independent Jewish
fighting units were dismantled, the
IDF was created and the Carmeli brigade became the "18th
Brigade". During the Sinai Campaign, the brigade was deployed
on the Jordanian border, and therefore did not have an active
role in the combat. One of the main conclusions after the war
was that the army needed armored units, and the 18th Brigade
started the changeover by becoming "the 45th Armored Brigade".
The brigade
commander, Moshe Bar-Kochba (Brill) commanded the brigade in
the Six Day War. The brigade received the Eastern sector. The
IDF took the initiative to attack, in order to remove the
threat of the Long Tom guns on the valley settlements and on
the Ramat David airfield. The brigade fought a number of
bloody battles in the Dotan Valley, which ended with the
blowing up of the Jordan river bridges.
At the start of the 1970s, the brigade participated in
armored attacks on terrorist bases in South Lebanon and Syria.
The experiences of the brigade during the Yom Kippur War in
1973 were particularly difficult. At the time, the Barak
brigade was the only regular armored force on the Golan
Heights. In the light of intelligence reports, the 7th Armored
Division was sent to the Golan Heights two days before the
outbreak of hostilities. However, the 7th Division soldiers
were not familiar with the Golan Heights. The two brigades
were spread out is isolated teams along the border line. The
Barak brigade was responsible for the Southern Golan Heights
sector. The main Syrian efforts to break through the border
was in the Southern Golan Heights area, and the ratio of
defenders to attackers forces was extremely unfavorable.
During the Yom Kippur War, 112 soldiers from the Barak
brigade were killed in action. After the war the brigade
rebuilt itself and later participated in the Litani Campaign
and other armored operations.
In the Peace for Galilee War, the brigade led division
forces into Lebanon. This war was in built-up areas, hardly
the typical combat arena for armor. The brigade fought in the
Beirut sector, and participated in the capture of the airport.
It then continued to fight in the eastern sector in Lebanon.
The brigade participated in all subsequent redeployments
stabilizing the lines in the Lebanese sector, and was among
the last forces to leave Lebanon.
Similar to the past, today the brigade is responsible for
defending the northern sector of the Golan Heights and
participates in ongoing security operations in Judea, Samaria
and Lebanon.
In recent years, the brigade has changed over from the
Centurion tank, which it used for an entire generation, to the
ultramodern Merkava Mark 3 main battle tank. This changeover
to the best combat tank in the world today has just been
completed.